Bloomberg/Hong Kong
Cheung Kong Holdings offered $24bn in stock to buy out unit Hutchison Whampoa and will spin off its property assets in the biggest
reorganisation of Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing’s corporate empire.
Cheung Kong investors will swap their shares in the Hong Kong developer for stakes in a new holding company called CK Hutchison
Holdings, the company said in a January 9 exchange filing. CK Hutchison will then issue new shares to buy out minority owners of
Hutchison Whampoa, a conglomerate which controls ports, retail and telecommunications operations.
The reshuffle will end Hutchison Whampoa’s 37-year history as a separate listed company, which Li kept after he became the first
Chinese to control a British colonial trading company in 1979. The deal will simplify Li’s empire that has grown to stretch beyond
Hong Kong, allowing investors to more easily choose between a local property business and growing global assets in more than 50
countries.
The streamlined business also paves the way for Li to hand the company to his elder son, Victor, currently Cheung Kong’s deputy
chairman.
“As a person reaching a certain age, you want the company’s successor and all the executives here to more easily operate and to do
well, so it’s not a surprise,” Li, 86, said at a press conference after the announcement. “I want the company to do well not only
today but also in the future. That’s my responsibility.”
CK Hutchison will offer Hutchison Whampoa shareholders 0.684 CK Hutchison share for every Hutchison share, according to the
statement. Based on the January 9 close in Hong Kong, Cheung Kong is offering the equivalent of HK$85.36 for each Hutchison Whampoa
share, or a 2.3% discount, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
In US over-the-counter trading, Cheung Kong’s American depositary receipts gained 9.7% to $17.90 at 2:34pm in New York, after the
company announced the reorganization. Hutchison ADRs gained 9.3% to $24.61.
After the reorganisation, all of Li’s non-property assets, including stakes in Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings Ltd and the
recently acquired aircraft leasing business, will go into CK Hutchison. Real estate assets that are currently spread across
Hutchison Whampoa and Cheung Kong’s portfolios, mostly located in Hong Kong and China, will be consolidated into Cheung Kong
Property Holdings Ltd
Hutchison Whampoa expects the reorganisation to be completed by the end of June, Managing Director Canning Fok said at a separate
press briefing.
Li and his family trusts currently owns 43% of Cheung Kong, which controls 50% of Hutchison Whampoa. Following the reorganisation,
they will have a 30% stake in each of the new companies.
“It is a good move for investors as it helps to unlock the embedded value of both companies,” Steven Leung, director of
institutional sales at UOB Kay Hian Ltd, said by phone. “CK-Hutch, the new company, will offer a greater growth potential whereas
the property spinoff would provide steady investment.”
After the deal, CK Hutchison will spin off Cheung Kong Property and list it separately on the Hong Kong stock exchange, according
to the filing.
“Property is something about which investors are very cautious right now,” said Lee Wee Liat, a Hong Kong-based analyst at BNP
Paribas. “They are spinning it off because they want to take out the lesser-valued assets.”
China’s residential real estate market has been slowing, while transactions in Hong Kong have stalled as the government imposed
several rounds of curbs since 2010. The reorganisation is good for both companies and reflects their real value, Li said. He will
be chairman of both companies, according to the statement.
He has a net worth of $28.2bn, according to Bloomberg Billionaires’ Index.
Li said he hopes to increase the dividend payout this year.
The octogenarian tycoon has been accelerating overseas acquisitions while slowing investments at home. Last year, Li’s group of
companies snapped up Australian gas distributor Envestra and entered the plane-leasing market with purchase of 45 planes for
$1.9bn.
Shares of Cheung Kong fell 0.6% to HK$124.80 at the close of trading in Hong Kong on January 9, while Hutchison Whampoa gained 0.9%
to HK$87.40. The benchmark Hang Seng Index rose 0.4%.
HSBC Holdings Plc advised Cheung Kong, according to the filing.
A man walks near Hutchison House (left) in central Hong Kong. Cheung Kong Holdings has offered $24bn in stock to buy out unit Hutchison Whampoa and w